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27326378_1_0 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Charitable works
After the death of her husband, to assuage her grief Gamelin took an interest in charitable works. In 1827 she was guided by her spiritual director, Jean-Baptiste Bréguier dit Saint-Pierre, to pray to Our Lady of Seven Dolors and to join two groups organized by the Sulpician Fathers. These groups were the Confraternity of the Public Good, which arranged work for the unemployed, and the Ladies of Charity, a group aimed at relieving poverty and destitution through home visits and the distribution of alms. In 1828 she also joined the Confraternity of the Holy Family, a group dedicated to the spiritual growth of its members and the spreading of the Roman Catholic faith. For a short period in 1829 she also worked with Agathe-Henriette Huguet-Latour's organization, the Charitable Institution for Female Penitents. While working with these groups, Gamelin gradually divested herself of her financial assets, funnelling the proceeds into the charities with which she was working. |
27326378_1_1 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Charitable works
From her home visits, the young widow had been struck by the misery in which single and isolated elderly women lived. As a result, in 1829, Gamelin took four of these frail and sick elderly women into her own home on the Rue Saint-Antoine. By 1830 she had decided that larger premises were needed to care for them, and on 4 March 1830 she opened a shelter for frail or sick elderly women in Montreal on the corner of Rue Saint-Laurent and Rue Sainte-Catherine, in the Saint Lawrence district, near the homes of many of her relatives. The building for the shelter was provided by the Abbé Claude Fay, parish priest of the Church of Notre-Dame in Montreal. In 1831 the shelter moved to a larger building rented by Gamelin at the corner of Rue Saint-Lawrence and Rue Saint-Philippe. At the time of the move, the new building housed 15 boarders, with a maximum capacity of 20, and also provided a residence for Gamelin. The shelter expanded until in 1836 it again required larger premises. On 14 March 1836 a house on the corner of Rue Sainte-Catherine and Rue Lacroix was donated by Antoine-Olivier Berthelet, a wealthy philanthropist, and shortly thereafter the shelter moved to these new premises, called the "Yellow House". By this time, Gamelin had 24 women as her co-workers in her work. |
27326378_1_2 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Charitable works
In March 1838, Gamelin contracted typhoid fever and became seriously ill; however, she later recovered. |
27326378_1_3 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Political beliefs
During the years leading up to the Lower Canada Rebellion, Gamelin was a supporter of the Canadian Party, the forerunner of the Patriot Party. Her brother François Tavernier was an ardent supporter of Joseph Papineau and the Patriots, and during the 1832 Montreal West by-election he was arrested and charged with assaulting a supporter of Stanley Bagg, an opposing Tory politician. Gamelin's cousin Joseph Perrault had been elected to the Assembly as a member of the Canadian Party. In the 1832 by-election for Montreal West, Lower Canada, Gamelin was one of 226 women who sought to vote. She cast her vote for the Patriot candidate Daniel Tracey in preference to his Tory opponent Bagg. |
27326378_1_4 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Charitable works
During the Lower Canada Rebellion (1837–1839), Gamelin obtained permission to visit imprisoned rebels who were under sentences of death, and gave them counseling and helped them to contact their families. |
27326378_2_0 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. The House of Providence
In May 1841, Ignace Bourget, the newly appointed Bishop of Montreal, travelled to Europe, where he visited France. There, among other business, he attempted to persuade the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul to come to Canada. He intended for the Daughters to take charge of Gamelin's Asylum to put it on a sound footing. In his absence, on 18 September 1841, the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada incorporated the shelter as the Montreal Asylum for Aged and Infirm Women. |
27326378_2_1 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. The House of Providence
Bourget announced this plan to Gamelin and her staff on 16 October 1841, shortly after his return from France. That same day, the women who formed the corporation voted to purchase land for a separate facility, to be known as the Asylum of Providence. On the following 27 October they elected the Widow Gamelin as Director of the corporation. On 6 November the corporation bought land on a block bounded by Rue Sainte-Catherine, Rue Lacroix, and Rue Mignonne. Plans for a new facility were commissioned from architect John Ostell, and construction commenced on 20 December 1841. On 16 February 1842, Gamelin donated the last of her property to the corporation. |
27326378_2_2 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. The House of Providence
However, on 8 November 1842, Bishop Bourget received word that the Daughters of Charity had decided not to pursue a mission to Montreal. He therefore decided to found a new religious community to manage the asylum, and put out a call for suitable women to join such a group. By 25 March 1843 seven women had expressed an interest, and they were placed into a novitiate under the direction of Jean-Charles Prince, coadjutor bishop of Montreal. Gamelin was not one of those women, but Bourget was nevertheless eager to associate her with the project by permitting her to attend all spiritual exercises of the novices. On 8 July 1843, one of the novices withdrew from the program, leaving an opening which Gamelin was intended to take. |
27326378_2_3 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. The House of Providence
Prior to entering the novitiate, however, Gamelin was sent by Bourget to the United States to visit and study the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph in Emmitsburg, Maryland, founded by Elizabeth Ann Seton in 1809, with the aim of obtaining a model for a new religious congregation. Gamelin returned with a handwritten copy of the Rule of St. Vincent de Paul, and on 8 October 1843, she took the religious habit of the new congregation as a novice. |
27326378_3_0 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Sisters of Providence
On 29 March 1844, a ceremony was held at the chapel of the Asylum of Providence, in which Bourget conferred canonical status on the new religious congregation and named it the Daughters of Charity, Servants of the Poor (later to become popularly known as the Sisters of Charity of Providence; in 1970 the congregation officially was named the Sisters of Providence). At this ceremony, Gamelin and the other six novices became religious sisters, taking the traditional vows of chastity, poverty, and obedience as well as a fourth one of service to the poor. The following day (30 March) Gamelin was elected Superior General of the new congregation and was granted the title of Mother Gamelin. |
27326378_3_1 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Sisters of Providence
From 1843 the Sisters provided shelter to orphan girls and elderly women boarders, and in 1844 they launched the Hospice St-Joseph, dedicated to the care and shelter of sick and elderly Catholic priests. Also in 1845 the Sisters established an employment office to aid job seekers and prospective employers. They also began caring for the mentally ill and opened a school at Longue-Pointe in Montreal. In 1846, they opened a shelter at La Prairie, Quebec. |
27326378_3_2 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Sisters of Providence
In 1847 a typhus epidemic struck Montreal and Bishop Bourget called upon the religious communities of Montreal, including the Sisters of Providence, to aid in the treatment of its victims. Following the epidemic Gamelin assumed responsibility for the Hospice Saint-Jérôme-Émilien, a facility dedicated to the children of immigrant-Irish typhus victims. Late that year Gamelin dispatched some of the Sisters to teach at the École Saint-Jacques, which was suffering from staff shortages. In 1849, she established the Hôpital Saint-Camille to help respond to that year's cholera epidemic. |
27326378_3_3 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Sisters of Providence
In 1849 Gamelin successfully petitioned the Attorney General of Lower Canada, Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine, for permission to open an insane asylum at Longue-Pointe. Also that year she established a convent at Sainte-Élisabeth, Quebec, and in 1850 it was joined by a convent at Sorel-Tracy, Quebec. Late in 1850 Gamelin again visited the United States and toured the establishments of the Sisters of Charity, with special attention to their lunatic asylums. |
27326378_3_4 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Sisters of Providence
On 23 September 1851, exhausted by her labors, Gamelin died of cholera during an epidemic of that year, following an illness that lasted less than 12 hours. Her last words were "Humility, simplicity, charity...above all chari...". She was buried the following day in the vault of the Asylum of Providence. At the time of her death, there were over 50 professed Sisters of the congregation and 19 novices caring for nearly a thousand women, children, and six elderly priests. |
27326378_4_0 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Veneration
In 1960, investigations were begun with the intention of starting the cause for Gamelin's possible beatification and canonization. On 31 May 1981 the inquiry was formally begun in the Archdiocese of Montreal, and Gamelin was thereby proclaimed a Servant of God (the first of four steps on the path to Roman Catholic sainthood). |
27326378_4_1 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Veneration
In 1983, an inquiry into Gamelin's canonization cause was begun by a diocesan tribunal. The evidence heard by the tribunal was compiled into a document called a positio, which was sent to Rome and presented to the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints. The positio was examined by a committee of expert theologians and, upon their recommendation, Pope John Paul II declared Gamelin to be Venerable (the second of the four stages of sainthood) on 23 December 1993. |
27326378_4_2 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Veneration
Also in 1983, a 13-year-old boy named Yannick Fréchette was observed to make a surprising recovery from leukemia following prayer directed to Mother Émilie Gamelin. The medical file relating to this case was submitted to doctors in Rome, and in 1999 those doctors unanimously declared Fréchette's recovery to be a miracle, attributable to the intercession of Gamelin. The healing was formally acknowledged as an authentic miracle by Pope John Paul II on 18 December 2000. The declaration of a miracle enabled Gamelin to meet the requirements for beatification, the third of the four stages of sainthood, and on 7 October 2001 Pope John Paul II beatified her. As a result of her beatification, Gamelin received the title "Blessed", and public veneration to her was authorized by the Roman Catholic Church in areas associated with her. |
27326378_4_3 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Legacy
Today the Sisters of Providence serve in 9 countries: Canada, United States, Chile, Philippines, Argentina, El Salvador, Cameroon, Haiti and Egypt. The Providence Centre is located on Grenet Street in Montreal. It accommodates the General Administration of the congregation, the Centre Émilie-Gamelin and the Sisters of Providence Museums and the Archives. |
27326378_4_4 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Veneration
The Asylum of Providence was demolished in 1963. Since 1995, this land (formally known as Square Berri) was renamed Place Émilie-Gamelin. |
27326378_4_5 | 27326378 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie%20Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin | Émilie Gamelin. Veneration
A statue of Gamelin, created in 1999 by artist Raoul Hunter, stands in the Rue Sainte-Catherine exit of Berri-UQAM Metro station. |
27326379_0_0 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
Michael Ochs (born 1943) is an American photographic archivist best known for his extensive collection of pictures related to rock music dating back to the 1950s and 1960s. The Michael Ochs Archives, located in Venice, California, contained 3 million vintage prints, proof sheets and negatives which were licensed daily for use in CD reissues, books, films and documentaries. |
27326379_0_1 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
The Los Angeles Times called Ochs "America's preeminent rock 'n' roll photo archivist" and described his archive as "the dominant force in the rock image marketplace"; The New York Times called it "the premier source of musician photography in the world". Ochs sold the archive to Getty Images in 2007. |
27326379_0_2 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs. Life and career
Ochs was born in Austin, Texas, in 1943. He grew up in Ohio and New York. After graduating from Ohio State University in 1966, he worked as a photographer for Columbia Records, shooting such artists as Taj Mahal and the Chambers Brothers. In the late sixties, Ochs served as manager to his brother, singer-songwriter Phil Ochs. In the seventies, Ochs led the publicity departments at Columbia, Shelter and ABC Records. |
27326379_0_3 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
Ochs began collecting photographs as a hobby. He would allow friends, including rock critics John Morthland and Lester Bangs, to use the pictures for free to illustrate their articles. Ochs began to take a more professional approach after two incidents. First, the Los Angeles Free Press attributed one of his photos to the "Michael Ochs Archives". Then, Dick Clark sent Ochs an unexpected check for $1,000 after Clark used some of Ochs's pictures on a television special. |
27326379_0_4 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
In 1984, Ochs published Rock Archives: A Photographic Journey Through the First Two Decades of Rock & Roll, which featured an introduction by Peter Guralnick. Writing in The New York Times, Janet Maslin praised Rock Archives as "an amazingly comprehensive photograph collection" that "offers glimpses of just about everyone seen or heard from during rock's first two decades". According to the Los Angeles Times, Rock Archives "put [Ochs's] archives on the map". |
27326379_0_5 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
During the eighties, Ochs hosted his Archives Alive radio show on KCRW, taught a History of Rock and Roll class at UCLA Extension, and was music coordinator for the films Hollywood Knights (1980); Liar’s Moon (1981); Losin' It (1983); and Christine (1983). |
27326379_0_6 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
In 1987, 26 years after the death of photographer Ed Feingersh, Ochs discovered several rolls of negatives of Marilyn Monroe by Feingersh. They included a shoot commissioned by Redbook made during the week March 24–30, 1955. They were the only candid images of Monroe made specifically for publication. |
27326379_0_7 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
During the 1990s, as record companies reissued large numbers of CDs, they often turned to Ochs for photographs to include in the liner notes. Ochs' pictures are featured in practically every release by Rhino Records and Bear Family Records. |
27326379_0_8 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
The archive is also tapped for illustrations for books — according to a 2006 New York Times estimate, about half of the rock and roll books issued at the time included photographs from the collection — and as background photos and research material in the production of documentaries, feature films, and television programs. |
27326379_0_9 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
In 2003 Ochs and fine artist Craig Butler curated The Greatest Album Covers That Never Were, an art exhibit of over 100 contemporary artists creating fantasy album covers of their favorite recording artists. The original exhibition featured works by author Kurt Vonnegut, musicians Graham Nash and Marilyn Manson, photographer William Claxton and artists Ralph Steadman and Robbie Conal. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame sponsored the exhibition and this non-profit traveling show premiered at their Cleveland museum continuing on to Seattle's Experience Music Project and assorted universities around the country. |
27326379_0_10 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
Ochs sold the Michael Ochs Archives to Getty Images for an undisclosed amount in February 2007. |
27326379_0_11 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs.
Ochs was one of three producers of the 2010 documentary film Phil Ochs: There but for Fortune. The film features interviews with Phil's family, friends, and associates, as well as archival news footage and photographic stills, including selections from Michael's collection. |
27326379_1_0 | 27326379 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael%20Ochs | Michael Ochs | Michael Ochs. Published works
Rock Archives: A Photographic Journey Through the First Two Decades of Rock & Roll. Introduction by Peter Guralnick. New York: Doubleday & Company, 1984.
Elvis in Hollywood; Michael Ochs; text by Steve Pond; New American Library, 1990;
1000 Record Covers. Cologne: Taschen, 1996. ISBN 3-8228-8595-9
Marilyn Monroe: From Beginning to End. Text by Michael Ventura; photographs by Earl Leaf from The Michael Ochs Archives, Blanford Press, 1997,
Shock, RATTLE & ROLL: Elvis Photographed During the Milton Berle Show; Michael Ochs & Ger Riff; 1998;
The Greatest Album Covers That Never Were. Michael Ochs & Craig Butler, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame & Museum; 2003; |
27326390_0_0 | 27326390 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss%20USA%201977 | Miss USA 1977 | Miss USA 1977.
Miss USA 1977 was the 26th Miss USA pageant, televised live by CBS from the Gillard Municipal Auditorium in Charleston, South Carolina on May 14, 1977. |
27326390_0_1 | 27326390 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss%20USA%201977 | Miss USA 1977 | Miss USA 1977.
The pageant was won by Kimberly Tomes of Texas, who was crowned by outgoing titleholder Barbara Peterson of Minnesota. Tomes was the first woman from Texas to win the Miss USA title, and went on to place as a semi-finalist at Miss Universe 1977. |
27326390_1_0 | 27326390 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss%20USA%201977 | Miss USA 1977 | Miss USA 1977. Historical significance
Texas wins competition for the first time and surpasses its previous highest placement in 1971. Also becoming in the 19th state who does it for the first time.
Nevada earns the 1st runner-up position for the first time, becoming its highest placement of the state until 2014.
Minnesota earns the 2nd runner-up position for the first time.
California earns the 3rd runner-up position for the fourth time. The last time it placed this was in 1974.
Virginia earns the 4th runner-up position for the first time and it reaches the highest placement since Deborah Shelton won in 1970.
States that placed in semifinals the previous year were California, Georgia, Minnesota, New Mexico and Texas.
California placed for the twenty-first consecutive year.
Texas placed for the third consecutive year.
Georgia, Minnesota and New Mexico made their second consecutive placement.
District of Columbia, Hawaii, New Jersey and Virginia last placed in 1975.
Arizona and Nevada last placed in 1974.
Maine last placed in 1970.
Missouri breaks an ongoing streak of placements since 1974. |
27326390_2_0 | 27326390 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss%20USA%201977 | Miss USA 1977 | Miss USA 1977. Alabama - Cheryl Burgess
Alaska - Edith Baker
Arizona - Toni Abranovic
Arkansas - Debra Duree
California - Pamela Gergely
Colorado - Mary Anne Genzel
Connecticut - Susan Crone
Delaware - Debby Faulkner
District of Columbia - Sharon Sutherland
Florida - Linda Lefevre
Georgia - Linda Kerr
Hawaii - Cely de Castro
Idaho - Leslie Kingon
Illinois - Elizabeth Curran
Indiana - Lynn Flaherty
Iowa - Cindy Woodard
Kansas - Sherry Brane
Kentucky - Sandy Smith
Louisiana - Patti Rosenbalm
Maine - Tina Brown
Maryland - Twyla Littleton
Massachusetts - Carolyn Marcil
Michigan - Jenny Pinks
Minnesota - Deborah Cossette
Mississippi - Leigh Tapley
Missouri - Connie Ast
Montana - Theresa Rose Bajt
Nebraska - Debbie Ridge
Nevada - Mary O'Neal Cantino
New Hampshire - Belinda Bridgeman
New Jersey - Juanita McCarty
New Mexico - Denise Funderburk
New York - Deborah Martin
North Carolina - Vikki Verbyla
North Dakota - Barbara Redlin
Ohio - Lesa Rummell
Oklahoma - Kathy Malchar
Oregon - Charisse Charlton
Pennsylvania - Lorraine Lincoski
Rhode Island - Susan Carten
South Carolina - Pam Hoover
South Dakota - Ginger Thomson
Tennessee - Rene Jean Smith
Texas - Kimberly Tomes
Utah - Michele Miner
Vermont - Anne Kent
Virginia - Lynn Herring
Washington - Ivy Lynn Reed
West Virginia - Pat Brown
Wisconsin - Vicki Payne
Wyoming - Michele Fisser |
27326390_3_0 | 27326390 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss%20USA%201977 | Miss USA 1977 | Miss USA 1977. 1977
May 1977 events in the United States
1977 beauty pageants
1977 in South Carolina |
27326395_0_0 | 27326395 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Once%20Upon%20a%20Lifetime | Once Upon a Lifetime | Once Upon a Lifetime.
"Once Upon a Lifetime" is a song written by Gary Baker and Frank J. Myers, and recorded by American country music group Alabama. It was released in December 1992 as the third single from their album American Pride. The song reached No. 3 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in March 1993. |
27326403_0_0 | 27326403 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibio%20femoratus | Bibio femoratus | Bibio femoratus.
Bibio femoratus is commonly known as the March fly. Bibio femoratus is one of at least 90 types of March flies, which occur in the United States and Canada. In the southeastern United States, especially around the Gulf Coast, Bibio femoratus is known as the lovebug. |
27326403_0_1 | 27326403 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibio%20femoratus | Bibio femoratus | Bibio femoratus. General information
Bibio femoratus is a fly (Diptera) in the family Bibionidae. There are approximately 650-700 species known worldwide, with at least 90 of them in the genus Bibio. Bibio femoratus was described by the German entomologist Christian Rudolph Wilhelm Wiedemann in 1820. |
27326403_0_2 | 27326403 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibio%20femoratus | Bibio femoratus | Bibio femoratus. Description
Bibio femoratus is medium-sized and usually black, though the thorax and legs can be orange or red. The antennae are relatively short and thick, have 10 segments and are located low on the head. The wings usually have a dark spot on the leading edge about two thirds of the way out away from the body. The adults, which are usually abundant in early Spring, are known to form copulatory swarms, hence the term lovebug. Once fertilized, the females lay their eggs randomly on soil surfaces. The larvae develop during Fall and Winter and feed on decaying organic matter. |
27326403_0_3 | 27326403 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibio%20femoratus | Bibio femoratus | Bibio femoratus.
Bibio femoratus is a slow and clumsy flier and is usually found a couple feet off the ground. They can be observed tumbling around and flailing their legs in an effort to right themselves. After synchronous emergence, Bibio femoratus forms large swarms of mating pairs. The mating pairs are joined at the abdomen and stay that way for a while. They seem oblivious and unaware of humans as a threat, and will not make any efforts to avoid sudden movements or threatening gestures. |
27326403_0_4 | 27326403 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibio%20femoratus | Bibio femoratus | Bibio femoratus. Larval Stage
3/8 to 1 inch long
white, yellowish or brown legless cylindrical body
dark brown head
most segments have short spine-like projections
feed on decaying plant matter (sometimes grass roots) |
27326403_0_5 | 27326403 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibio%20femoratus | Bibio femoratus | Bibio femoratus. Adult Stage
3/4 to 1 and 1/4 inches long
dark brown to black long abdomen; red or orange thorax and legs
small down pointed head with short 10-segmented antennae
wings have dark spot on R1 (leading edge, 2/3 of the wing from body)
feed mostly on liquids like water or nectar |
27326403_1_0 | 27326403 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bibio%20femoratus | Bibio femoratus | Bibio femoratus. References
Triplethorne & Johnson (2004). Borror's Introduction to the Study of Insects, Brooks-Cole. 715-716
www.itis.gov
crawford.tardigrade.net
www.ipm.ucdavis.edu
ipmnet.org
bugguide.net |
27326406_0_0 | 27326406 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V.%20V.%20Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan.
V.V. "Sugi" Ganeshananthan (born 1980) is an American fiction writer, essayist, and journalist of Ilankai Tamil descent. Her work has appeared in many leading newspapers and journals, including Granta, The Atlantic Monthly, and The Washington Post. |
27326406_0_1 | 27326406 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V.%20V.%20Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan.
Ganeshananthan is the author of Love Marriage, a novel set in Sri Lanka and North America, which was published by Random House in April 2008. Love Marriage was named one of The Washington Post Book World's Best of 2008 and appeared on the longlist for the Orange Prize. It was also selected as a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers Pick. |
27326406_0_2 | 27326406 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V.%20V.%20Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan. Biography
She graduated from Harvard College in 2002, and later earned her M.F.A. at the University of Iowa in 2005. In 2007, she earned another master's degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, where she was a Bollinger Fellow specializing in arts and culture journalism. |
27326406_0_3 | 27326406 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V.%20V.%20Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan.
She was the Zell Visiting Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Michigan through 2014. In 2015, she began teaching at the University of Minnesota. |
27326406_0_4 | 27326406 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V.%20V.%20Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan.
She is a past vice president of the South Asian Journalists Association and now serves on the board of the Asian American Writers' Workshop, as well as on the graduate board of The Harvard Crimson. |
27326406_1_0 | 27326406 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V.%20V.%20Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan. Love Marriage
Ganeshananthan began Love Marriage as part of her senior thesis at Harvard University under the direction of Jamaica Kincaid. In a series of vignettes, Ganeshananthan's novel chronicles how Sri Lankan politics have affected and continue to affect a particular family. Its narrator, Yalini, is a young woman born to Sri Lankan parents in New York on July 23, 1983—the same day as one of the most violent episodes in the Sri Lankan Civil War, Black July. The novel follows Yalini and her family from suburban America to Toronto, where they reunite with an uncle who has left Sri Lanka after a life of militancy with the Tamil Tigers. |
27326406_2_0 | 27326406 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V.%20V.%20Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan. Short Fiction
"Hippocrates." Granta, Winter 2009.
"Enter the Body." Himal Southasian, October/November 2009.
"A Just Country." Esquire, May 7, 2008. |
27326406_2_1 | 27326406 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V.%20V.%20Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan. Selected Articles
"The Buzz Board." The Daily Beast. December 28, 2009.
"Two Mr. Foxes, Two Views of Food." The Atlantic. December 14, 2009.
"I Don’t Want To Fight (in conversation with Amitava Kumar)." Guernica." November 2009.
"The Buzz Board." The Daily Beast. October 25, 2009.
"Written in the Stars." The Washington Post. October 19, 2008.
"The Buzz Board." The Daily Beast. July 28, 2009.
"I Wrote a Story, Not the Whole Story." The Washington Post. July 13, 2008.
"Whale Country." EGO Magazine. September 20, 2007.
"The Big Picture." (Co-authored with James Fallows) The Atlantic Monthly. October 2004.
"The outsider-geeks of the Dean campaign join forces with Al Gore, the most mainstream geek in American politics." The American Prospect. December 11, 2003.
"The Late-Decision Program." The Atlantic Monthly. November 2003.
"Home School." The American Prospect. September 22, 2003.
"Retro Active: Bill Clinton can still work a crowd like no other Democrat -- which is both a good and bad thing." The American Prospect. September 16, 2003. |
27326424_0_0 | 27326424 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hometown%20Honeymoon | Hometown Honeymoon | Hometown Honeymoon.
"Hometown Honeymoon" is a song written by Josh Leo and Jim Photoglo, and recorded by American country music group Alabama. It was released in March 1993 as the fourth and final single from their album, American Pride. The song reached number 3 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in June 1993. |
27326427_0_0 | 27326427 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilmon%20Henry%20Sheldon | Wilmon Henry Sheldon | Wilmon Henry Sheldon.
Wilmon Henry Sheldon (1875–1981) was a twentieth-century American philosopher. |
27326427_1_0 | 27326427 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilmon%20Henry%20Sheldon | Wilmon Henry Sheldon | Wilmon Henry Sheldon. Life and career
Sheldon was educated at Harvard University and taught at Yale. |
27326444_0_0 | 27326444 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book%20of%20Cuanu | Book of Cuanu | Book of Cuanu.
The Book of Cuanu is a lost Irish Annal, which referred to events from the fifth to seventh centuries. It is referred to on over a dozen occasions in the Annals of Ulster, its entries been terse accounts of battles or notable deaths. |
27326444_1_0 | 27326444 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book%20of%20Cuanu | Book of Cuanu | Book of Cuanu. In a short study concerning it, Eoghan O Mordha states that
"... by making use of the specific placename evidence in the entries attributed to the Book of Cuanu, it can be argued that, because the Cuanu entries display a bias towards recording events which took place for the most part in Lagin or the midlands, the entries can be regarded as been written somewhere in this general area." |
27326446_0_0 | 27326446 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W.%20H.%20Sheldon | W. H. Sheldon | W. H. Sheldon. W. H. Sheldon may refer to:
William Herbert Sheldon (1898-1977), American psychologist
Wilmon Henry Sheldon (1875-1981), American philosopher |
27326447_0_0 | 27326447 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T.L.C.%20A.S.A.P. | T.L.C. A.S.A.P. | T.L.C. A.S.A.P..
"T.L.C. A.S.A.P." is a song written by Gary Baker and Frank J. Myers, and recorded by American country music group Alabama. It was released in December 1993 as the second single from their album Cheap Seats. The song reached number 7 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in March 1994. |
27326458_0_0 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential.
Somatosensory evoked potential (SEP or SSEP) is the electrical activity of the brain that results from the stimulation of touch. SEP tests measure that activity and are a useful, noninvasive means of assessing somatosensory system functioning. By combining SEP recordings at different levels of the somatosensory pathways, it is possible to assess the transmission of the afferent volley from the periphery up to the cortex. SEP components include a series of positive and negative deflections that can be elicited by virtually any sensory stimuli. For example, SEPs can be obtained in response to a brief mechanical impact on the fingertip or to air puffs. However, SEPs are most commonly elicited by bipolar transcutaneous electrical stimulation applied on the skin over the trajectory of peripheral nerves of the upper limb (e.g., the median nerve) or lower limb (e.g., the posterior tibial nerve), and then recorded from the scalp. In general, somatosensory stimuli evoke early cortical components (N25, P60, N80), generated in the contralateral primary somatosensory cortex (S1), related to the processing of the physical stimulus attributes. About 100 ms after stimulus application, additional cortical regions are activated, such as the secondary somatosensory cortex (S2), and the posterior parietal and frontal cortices, marked by a parietal P100 and bilateral frontal N140. SEPs are routinely used in neurology today to confirm and localize sensory abnormalities, to identify silent lesions and to monitor changes during surgical procedures. |
27326458_0_1 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. History
The modern history of SEPs began with George Dawson's 1947 recordings of somatosensory cortical responses in patients with myoclonus, a neurological condition characterized by abrupt, involuntary, jerk-like contractions of a muscle or muscle group. Because of their relatively large amplitude and low frequency compatible with a low sampling rate of A/D conversion, the cortical SEPs were the first studied in normal subjects and patients. In the 1970s and early 1980s spinal and subcortical (far-field) potentials were identified. Although the origins and mechanisms of far-field SEPs are still debated in the literature, correlations among abnormal waveforms, lesion site, and clinical observations are fairly well established. However, the most recent advances were brought about by multichannel recordings of evoked potentials coupled with source modeling and source localization in 3D images of brain volume provided by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). |
27326458_0_2 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Theory/source
Modeling sources from the field distribution results in models of brain activation that may substantially differ from the observations of clinical correlations between the abnormal waveform and the lesion site. The approach based on clinical correlations supports the idea of a single generator for each SEP component, which is suitable for responses reflecting the sequential activation fibers and synaptic relays of the somatosensory pathways. Conversely, source modeling suggests that the evoked field distribution at a given moment may result from activities of multiple distributed sources that overlap in time. This model fits better with the parallel activation and the feedback controls that characterize the processing of somatosensory inputs at the cortical level. |
27326458_1_0 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Component characteristics
When recording SEPs, one usually seeks to study peripheral, spinal, brainstem, and early cortical SEPs during the same run. Electrodes placed on the scalp pick up both SEPs generated in the cortex and thalamocortical fibers (which are picked up as near-field responses located in restricted areas) and far-field positivities reflecting the evoked activity generated in peripheral, spinal and brainstem somatosensory fibers. |
27326458_1_1 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Component characteristics
The literature is filled with discussions about the most appropriate site for the reference electrode to record each of the components. Considering the field distribution, the optimal recording condition is in theory that in which the reference is not influenced by the activity under study. Most of the far-field potentials are widely distributed over the scalp. Consequently, they reach their maximal amplitude when the reference electrode is non-cephalic. A non-cephalic reference common to all channels is adequate for all near-field recordings. One relevant issue is that electrical physiological (electrocardiogram, electromyogram, etc.) noise level increases with the distance between the active and reference electrodes in non-cephalic reference montages. The routine four-channel montages proposed in the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology (IFCN) guidelines explore the afferent peripheral volley, the segmental spinal responses at the neck and lumbar spine levels, as well as the subcortical far-field and early cortical SEPs, using scalp electrodes placed in the parietal and frontal regions for upper limb SEPs and at the vertex for lower limb SEPs. |
27326458_1_2 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Component characteristics
Median nerve SEP begins with the delivery of an electrical stimulus to that nerve at the wrist. A 100–300 microsecond square wave electrical pulse is delivered at intensities
strong enough to cause a 1–2 cm thumb twitch. Upon delivery of such a stimulus, nerve action volleys travel up sensory fibers and motor fibers to the shoulder, producing a peak as they enter. This peak is formally known as N9. In the course of conduction, the sensory fibers then transverse the cervical roots and enter the cervical cord. The median nerve pathway then joins the posterior columns, sending off collateral branches to synapse in the midcervical cord. This midcervical cord activity gives rise to a peak known as N13. The N13 is best measured over the fifth cervical spine. Further conduction in the posterior columns passes through the synapse at the cervicomedullary junction and enters the lemniscal decussation. A scalp P14 peak is generated at this level. As conduction continues up the medial lemniscus to upper midbrain and into the thalamus, a scalp negative peak is detected, the N18. After synapsing in the thalamus and traversing the internal capsule, the N20 is recorded over the somatosensory cortex contralateral to the wrist stimulated, corresponding to arrival of the nerve impulses at the primary somatosensory region. |
27326458_1_3 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Component characteristics
Posterior tibial nerve stimulation at the ankle gives rise to a similar series of subsequent peaks. An N8 potential can be detected over the posterior tibial nerve at the knee. An N22 potential can be detected over the upper lumbar spine, corresponding to the collateral activity as the sensory fibers synapse in the lumbar spinal cord. More rostrally, a cervical potential can occasionally be detected over the mid- or upper cervical spine. Finally, a P37 scalp potential is seen over the midline scalp lateral to the midsagittal plane, but ipsilateral to the leg stimulated. |
27326458_2_0 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Non-pathological factors
The effects of age on SEP latencies mainly reflect conduction slowing in the peripheral nerves evidenced by the increase of the N9 component after median nerve stimulation. Shorter central conduction times (CCT, the transit time of the ascending volley in the central segments of the somatosensory pathways) have also been reported in females as compared to males, and conduction velocities are also known to be affected by changes in limb temperature. It has always been assumed that cortical SEPs peaking before 50 ms following stimulation of the upper limb are not significantly affected by cognitive processes. However, Desmedt et al. (1983) identified a P40 potential in response to target stimuli in an oddball task, suggesting that attention-related processes could affect early cortical SEPs. Finally, some changes in the amplitude, waveform, and latency of the parietal N20 have been reported during natural sleep in normal subjects. |
27326458_2_1 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Pathological factors
Median and posterior tibial SEPs are used in a variety of clinical settings. They can detect, localize and quantify focal interruptions along the somatosensory pathways, which may be due to any number of focal neurological problems, including trauma, compression, multiple sclerosis, tumor or other focal lesions. SEPs are also sensitive to cortical attenuation due to diffuse central nervous system (CNS) disorders. This is seen in a variety of neurodegenerative disorders and metabolic problems such as vitamin B12 deficiency. When a patient suffers from sensory impairment, and when the clinical localization of the sensory impairment is unclear, SEPs can be helpful in distinguishing whether the sensory impairment is due to CNS problems as opposed to peripheral nervous system problems. Median nerve SEP is also helpful in predicting neurological sequelae following cardiac arrest: if the cortical N20 and subsequent components are completely absent 24 hours or more after the cardiac arrest, essentially all of the patients go on to die or have vegetative neurological sequelae. |
27326458_3_0 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Clinical applications
In the recent decade, the clinical usefulness of SEPs entered the operating room, allowing the intraoperative monitoring of the CNS and, thus, safeguarding CNS structures during high risk surgeries. Continuous SEP monitoring can warn a surgeon and prompt intervention before impairment becomes permanent. Testing with median nerve SEPs is used to identify the sensory and motor cortex during craniotomies and in monitoring surgery at the midcervical or upper cervical levels. Posterior tibial nerve SEP monitoring is widely used for monitoring the spinal cord during scoliosis procedures and other surgical interventions in which the spinal cord is at risk for damage. Recording of far field intracranially generated peaks can facilitate monitoring even when the primary cortical peaks are impaired due to anesthetic agents. Over time, SEP testing and monitoring in surgery have become standard techniques widely used to reduce risk of postoperative neurologic problems for the patient. Continuous SEP monitoring can warn a surgeon about potential spinal cord damage, which can prompt intervention before impairment becomes permanent. Overall, SEPs can meet a variety of specific clinical objectives, including: |
27326458_3_1 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Clinical applications
to establish objective evidence of abnormality when signs or symptoms are equivocal;
to look for clinically silent lesions;
to define an anatomical level of impairment along a pathway;
to provide evidence about the general category of the pathology;
to monitor objective changes in the patient's status over time. |
27326458_3_2 | 27326458 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somatosensory%20evoked%20potential | Somatosensory evoked potential | Somatosensory evoked potential. Experimental paradigms
Besides the clinical setting, SEPs have shown to be useful in distinct experimental paradigms. Schubert et al. (2006) used SEPs to investigate the differential processing of consciously perceived versus unperceived somatosensory stimuli. The authors used an 'extinction' paradigm to examine the connection between activation of S1 and somatosensory awareness, and observed that early SEPs (P60, N80), generated in the contralateral S1, were independent of stimulus perception. In contrast, amplitude enhancements were observed for the P100 and N140 for consciously perceived stimuli. The authors concluded that early activation of S1 is not sufficient to warrant conscious stimulus perception. Conscious stimulus processing differs significantly from unconscious processing starting around 100 ms after stimulus presentation when the signal is processed in parietal and frontal cortices, brain regions crucial for stimulus access into conscious perception. In another study, Iwadate et al. (2005) looked at the relationship between physical exercise and somatosensory processing using SEPs. The study compared SEPs in athletes (soccer players) and non-athletes, using two oddball tasks following separate somatosensory stimulation at the median nerve and at the tibial nerve. In the athlete group the N140 amplitudes were larger during upper- and lowerlimb tasks when compared to non-athletes. The authors concluded that plastic changes in somatosensory processing might be induced by performing physical exercises that require attention and skilled movements. |
27326465_0_0 | 27326465 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thure%20Johansson%20%28athlete%29 | Thure Johansson (athlete) | Thure Johansson (athlete).
Thure Johansson (1886–1970) was a Swedish long-distance runner who is credited by the International Association of Athletics Federations for setting a world's best of 2:40:34 in the marathon on August 31, 1909. Johansson's record was reportedly set on a 368-meter indoor track at the Idrottsparken Velodrome Marathon in Stockholm, Sweden. |
27326465_0_1 | 27326465 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thure%20Johansson%20%28athlete%29 | Thure Johansson (athlete) | Thure Johansson (athlete).
Competing against American Jim Crowley and Canadian Hans Holmer at the 69th Regiment Armory in New York City, Johansson broke Dorando Pietri's indoor record for the marathon on March 1, 1910 (2:36:55.2).
As of May 2010, the Association of Road Racing Statisticians notes that Johansson's mark still stands as the sixth fastest time on an indoor track. The following month, Johansson soundly defeated Crowley in a match race at Celtic Park in New York City. |
27326465_0_2 | 27326465 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thure%20Johansson%20%28athlete%29 | Thure Johansson (athlete) | Thure Johansson (athlete).
Johansson was trained and managed by Swedish-born Ernie Hjertberg, coach of the Irish American Athletic Club and a prior US track and field champion. |
27326468_0_0 | 27326468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C.F.%20Pachuca%20Reserves%20and%20Academy | C.F. Pachuca Reserves and Academy | C.F. Pachuca Reserves and Academy.
Club de Fútbol Pachuca Reserves and Academy are the under-20, under-17 and under-15 teams of Mexican Liga MX Pachuca. |
27326468_0_1 | 27326468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C.F.%20Pachuca%20Reserves%20and%20Academy | C.F. Pachuca Reserves and Academy | C.F. Pachuca Reserves and Academy. History
Pachuca Juniors played its single season at Primera División A in 2004-05 season. After the season the club license was sold and changed name to Indios de Ciudad Juárez. A new team was restarted in 2005–06 Segunda División. |
27326468_0_2 | 27326468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C.F.%20Pachuca%20Reserves%20and%20Academy | C.F. Pachuca Reserves and Academy | C.F. Pachuca Reserves and Academy.
In 2007-08 season, the place of promotion to Primera División A was sold to Chiapas and re-formed as the Jaguares de Tapachula. A new team was affiliated to Segunda División again. |
27326468_0_3 | 27326468 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C.F.%20Pachuca%20Reserves%20and%20Academy | C.F. Pachuca Reserves and Academy | C.F. Pachuca Reserves and Academy.
In 2008-09 season, the place of promotion was given to Irapuato FC and Pachuca Juniors B of Tercera División apparently became the new Pachuca Juniors. The team finished the last (18th) in Group V in 2009-10 season. |
27326471_0_0 | 27326471 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We%20Can%27t%20Love%20Like%20This%20Anymore | We Can't Love Like This Anymore | We Can't Love Like This Anymore.
"We Can't Love Like This Anymore" is a song written by Wendell Mobley and John Jarrard, and recorded by American country music group Alabama. It was released in August 1994 as the first single from their compilation album Greatest Hits Vol. III. The song reached number 6 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in December 1994. |
27326479_0_0 | 27326479 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison%20of%20CRM%20systems | Comparison of CRM systems | Comparison of CRM systems. See also
Comparison of Mobile CRM systems
Comparison of ERP software (Enterprise Resource Planning)
Customer relationship management (CRM) |
27326485_0_0 | 27326485 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thure%20Johansson | Thure Johansson | Thure Johansson. Thure Johansson may refer to:
Thure Johansson (athlete) (1886–?), Swedish long-distance runner who held a world best in the marathon
Thure Johansson (wrestler) (1912–1986), Swedish wrestler who won a bronze medal in the 1948 Summer Olympics
Thure G. Johansson, father of Swedish politician Ines Uusmann and discoverer of Bocksten Man |
27326506_0_0 | 27326506 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozona%20High%20School | Ozona High School | Ozona High School.
Ozona High School is a public high school located in Ozona, Texas (USA) and classified as a 2A school by the UIL. It is part of the Crockett County Consolidated Common School District which covers all of Crockett County. Although the district is county-wide, the high school goes by Ozona. Ozona High School is known for the Lion Band. Although there is a lack of an FFA, CDE and LDE program, there is a stock show and 4-H program that is strong in the community. In 2015, the school was rated "Met Standard" by the Texas Education Agency. |
27326506_1_0 | 27326506 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozona%20High%20School | Ozona High School | Ozona High School. Baseball
Basketball
Cross Country
Football
Golf
Powerlifting
Softball
Tennis
Track and Field |
27326506_1_1 | 27326506 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozona%20High%20School | Ozona High School | Ozona High School. State Titles
Girls Basketball -
1995(2A), 1996(2A)
Boys Cross Country -
2004(2A), 2013(1A)
Girls Golf -
1997(2A) |
27326506_2_0 | 27326506 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozona%20High%20School | Ozona High School | Ozona High School. Schools in Crockett County, Texas
Public high schools in Texas
Recorded Texas Historic Landmarks |
27326509_0_0 | 27326509 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streator%20Township%20High%20School | Streator Township High School | Streator Township High School.
Streator Township High School, also known as Streator High School (SHS), is a high school located in Streator, Illinois, approximately 90 miles southwest of Chicago. |
27326509_0_1 | 27326509 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streator%20Township%20High%20School | Streator Township High School | Streator Township High School. History
The school is named after its city's namesake, Worthy S. Streator. The original building for the school was financed by Streator's founder, Ralph Plumb. The school graduated its first class in 1876. There were seven students: one boy and six girls. |
27326509_0_2 | 27326509 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streator%20Township%20High%20School | Streator Township High School | Streator Township High School.
In 2012, the Men's Varsity Basketball team took home its first Regional Championship since 1969, by defeating Pontiac, 61–59. |
27326509_0_3 | 27326509 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streator%20Township%20High%20School | Streator Township High School | Streator Township High School. Notable alumni
Doug Dieken - Pro football player with the Cleveland Browns
Thurlow Essington - Illinois lawyer and state senator
Rube Novotney - Former MLB player (Chicago Cubs)
Ernest Ramme - United States Air Force Brigader General
Adam Shabala - Former MLB player (San Francisco Giants)
Clay Zavada - Former MLB player and current minor league player (Arizona Diamondbacks) |
27326509_1_0 | 27326509 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streator%20Township%20High%20School | Streator Township High School | Streator Township High School. Public high schools in Illinois
Schools in LaSalle County, Illinois
1875 establishments in Illinois |
27326510_0_0 | 27326510 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In%20Pictures%20%28song%29 | In Pictures (song) | In Pictures (song).
"In Pictures" is a song written by Joe Doyle and Bobby Boyd, and recorded by Linda Davis for her 1994 studio album Shoot for the Moon. The song was later recorded by Alabama and released in September 1995 as the second single and title track from their album In Pictures. The song reached #4 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in December 1995. |
27326510_0_1 | 27326510 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In%20Pictures%20%28song%29 | In Pictures (song) | In Pictures (song). Content
The song tells the story of a divorced father which the song implies that the mother has full custody of his daughter (and apparently has very little, if any, visitation rights) and thus is forced to watch his daughter grow up via photographs. |
27326515_0_0 | 27326515 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayne%20Phillips%20%28politician%29 | Wayne Phillips (politician) | Wayne Phillips (politician).
Wayne Phillips (born 28 March 1952) is an Australian politician. He was the Liberal member for Eltham in the Victorian Legislative Assembly from 1992 to 2002. |
27326515_0_1 | 27326515 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayne%20Phillips%20%28politician%29 | Wayne Phillips (politician) | Wayne Phillips (politician).
Phillips was born in Melbourne, and attended North Brunswick State School (until 1957) and Moreland High School (until 1963). He qualified as a butcher at William Angliss Trade School and was apprenticed in 1967. In 1973 he acquired a general store, which he managed until 1975 when he ran a nursery. From 1987 until 1992 he was a primary producer. He joined the Liberal Party in 1987, and in the 1990 federal election ran for the safe Labor seat of Scullin. He was a Diamond Valley Shire Councillor 1980–94, and was President 1987–88. |
27326515_0_2 | 27326515 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayne%20Phillips%20%28politician%29 | Wayne Phillips (politician) | Wayne Phillips (politician).
In 1992, Phillips was elected to the Victorian Legislative Assembly as the member for the new seat of Eltham, which had a notional Labor majority. Phillips served until his defeat in 2002 by Labor candidate Steve Herbert. |
27326515_0_3 | 27326515 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayne%20Phillips%20%28politician%29 | Wayne Phillips (politician) | Wayne Phillips (politician).
In 2005 Phillips was elected to Banyule City Council, representing Beale Ward. In January 2014, Philips was accused of 'buying votes' in his role as a Banyule Councillor, for using his discretionary Ward Fund to fund a proposed capital works project in another Councillors ward. |
27326515_0_4 | 27326515 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wayne%20Phillips%20%28politician%29 | Wayne Phillips (politician) | Wayne Phillips (politician).
In February 2014, Phillips was the subject of a cruelty complaint to the RSPCA and the Victorian Department of Environment and Primary Industries regarding the condition of a herd of 6,000 goats on his property in Wollert, north of Melbourne. The Department of Environment and Primary Industries attended the property and were satisfied with changes Cr Phillips had put in place and the welfare of the goats. |
27326537_0_0 | 27326537 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WINI | WINI | WINI.
WINI (1420 AM) is a radio station broadcasting an oldies format. Licensed to Murphysboro, Illinois, the station is owned by Southern Illinois Radio Group, and carries Westwood One's Good Time Oldies network. |
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